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THE  LIBRARY 

OF 

THE  UNIVERSITY 

OF  CALIFORNIA 

RIVERSIDE 


SOME   IMAGIST    POETS 


S^OME   IMAGIST 
POETS 


AN    ANTHOLOGY 


BOSTON    AND    NEW    YORK 

HOUGHTON    MIFFLIN    COMPANY 

dbc  nitJcrjJiDc  prcj^s  Cambtibfle 


(  1^  iSj) 


COPYRIGHT,    1915,    BY   HOUGHTON  MIFFLIN   COMPANY 


ALL  RIGHTS   RESERVED 


Published  April  iqi^ 


PREFACE 

In  March,  191 4,  a  volume  appeared  entitled  "Des  Ima^ 
gistes."  It  was  a  collection  of  the  work  of  various  young 
poets,  presented  together  as  a  school.  This  school  has  been 
widely  discussed  by  those  interested  in  new  movements  in 
the  arts,  and  has  already  become  a  household  word.  Differ^ 
ences  of  taste  and  judgment,  however,  have  arisen  among 
the  contributors  to  that  book ;  growing  tendencies  are  forc^ 
ing  them  along  different  paths.  Those  of  us  whose  work 
appears  in  this  volume  have  therefore  decided  to  publish  our 
collection  under  a  new  title,  and  we  have  been  joined  by  two 
or  three  poets  who  did  not  contribute  to  the  first  volume, 
our  wider  scope  making  this  possible. 

In  this  new  book  we  have  followed  a  slightly  different 
arrangement  to  that  of  the  former  Anthology.  Instead  of  an 
arbitrary  selection  by  an  editor,  each  poet  has  been  permitted 
to  represent  himself  by  the  work  he  considers  his  best,  the 
only  stipulation  being  that  it  should  not  yet  have  appeared 
in  book  form.  A  sort  of  informal  committee  —  consisting 
of  more  than  half  the  authors  here  represented — have  ar^ 
ranged  the  book  and  decided  what  should  be  printed  and 

[  V  ] 


PREFACE 

what  omitted,  but,  as  a  general  rule,  the  poets  have  been 
allowed  absolute  freedom  in  this  direction,  limitations  of 
space  only  being  imposed  upon  them.  Also,  to  avoid  any 
appearance  of  precedence,  they  have  been  put  in  alphabeti-' 
cal  order. 

As  it  has  been  suggested  that  much  of  the  misunderstand^ 
ing  of  the  former  volume  was  due  to  the  fact  that  we  did  not 
explain  ourselves  in  a  preface,  we  have  thought  it  wise  to 
tell  the  public  what  our  aims  are,  and  why  we  are  banded 
together  between  one  set  of  covers. 

The  poets  in  this  volume  do  not  represent  a  clique.  Sev/ 
eral  of  them  are  personally  unknown  to  the  others,  but  they 
are  united  by  certain  common  principles,  arrived  at  inde^ 
pendently.  These  principles  are  not  new ;  they  have  fallen 
into  desuetude.  They  are  the  essentials  of  all  great  poetry, 
indeed  of  all  great  literature,  and  they  are  simply  these:  — 

1 .  To  use  the  language  of  common  speech,  but  to  employ 
always  the  exact  word,  not  the  nearly^exact,  nor  the  merely 
decorative  word. 

2.  To  create  new  rhythms  —  as  the  expression  of  new 
moods  —  and  not  to  copy  old  rhythms,  which  merely  echo 
old  moods.  We  do  not  insist  upon  ''free^verse"  as  the  only 
method  of  writing  poetry.  We  fight  for  it  as  for  a  principle 
of  liberty.  We  believe  that  the  individuality  of  a  poet  may 

[  vi  ] 


PREFACE 

often  be  better  expressed  in  free^verse  than  in  conventional 
forms.  In  poetry,  a  new  cadence  means  a  new  idea. 

3.  To  allow  absolute  freedom  in  the  choice  of  subject.  It 
is  not  good  art  to  write  badly  about  aeroplanes  and  automo^ 
biles ;  nor  is  it  necessarily  bad  art  to  write  well  about  the  past. 
We  believe  passionately  in  the  artistic  value  of  modern  life, 
but  we  wish  to  point  out  that  there  is  nothing  so  uninspir^ 
ing  nor  so  old-fashioned  as  an  aeroplane  of  the  year  191 1. 

4.  To  present  an  image  (hence  the  name:  "Imagist"). 
We  are  not  a  school  of  painters,  but  we  believe  that  poetry 
should  render  particulars  exactly  and  not  deal  in  vague  gen^- 
eralities,  however  magnificent  and  sonorous.  It  is  for  this 
reason  that  we  oppose  the  cosmic  poet,  who  seems  to  us  to 
shirk  the  real  difficulties  of  his  art. 

5.  To  produce  poetry  that  is  hard  and  clear,  never  blurred 
nor  indefinite. 

6.  Finally,  most  of  us  believe  that  concentration  is  of  the 
very  essence  of  poetry. 

The  subject  of  free/ verse  is  too  complicated  to  be  discussed 
here.  We  may  say  briefly,  that  we  attach  the  term  to  all  that 
increasing  amount  of  writing  whose  cadence  is  more  marked, 
more  definite,  and  closer  knit  than  that  of  prose,  but  which 
is  not  so  violently  nor  so  obviously  accented  as  the  soz-called 
"regular  verse."  We  refer  those  interested  in  the  question  to 


PREFACE 

the  Greek  Melic  poets,  and  to  the  many  excellent  French  stud^ 
ies  on  the  subject  by  such  distinguished  and  well/equipped 
authors  as  Remy  de  Gourmont,  Gustave  Kahn,  Georges  Du'' 
hamel,  Charles  Vildrac,  Henri  Gheon,  Robert  de  Souza, 
Andre  Spire,  etc. 

We  wish  it  to  be  clearly  understood  that  we  do  not  repre/ 
sent  an  exclusive  artistic  sect ;  we  publish  our  work  together 
because  of  mutual  artistic  sympathy,  and  we  propose  to  bring 
out  our  cooperative  volume  each  year  for  a  short  term  of 
years,  until  we  have  made  a  place  for  ourselves  and  our  prin^ 
ciples  such  as  we  desire. 


CONTENTS 

Richard  Aldington 

Childhood 

3 

The  Poplar 
Round  Pond 

10 
12 

Daisy- 
Epigrams 
The  Faun  sees  Snow  for  the  First  Time 

13 

16 

Lemures 

17 

H.  D. 

The  Pool 

21 

The  Garden 

22 

Sea  Lily 
Sea  Iris 

24 
25 

Sea  Rose 

27 

Oread 

28 

Orion  Dead 

29 

John  Gould  Fletcher 

The  Blue  Symphony 
London  Excursion 

33 
39 

F.  S.  Flint 

Trees 
Lunch 

53 
55 

[  -^^  ] 


CONTENTS 

Malady  56 

Accident  58 

Fragment  60 

Houses  62 

Eau-Forte  63 

D.  H.  Lawrence 

Ballad  of  Another  Ophelia  67 

Illicit  69 

Fireflies  in  the  Corn  70 

A  Woman  and  Her  Dead  Husband  72 

The  Mowers  75 

Scent  of  Irises  76 

Green  78 

Amy  Lowell 

Venus  Transiens  81 

The  Travelling  Bear  83 

The  Letter  85 

Grotesque  86 

Bullion  87 

Solitaire  88 

The  Bombardment  89 

Bibliography  93 

Thanks  are  due  to  the  editors  of  Poetry,  The  Smart  Set,  Poetry  and 
Drama,  and  The  Egoist  for  their  courteous  permission  to  reprint 
certain   of  these   poems    which    have    been    copyrighted   by   them. 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 


CHILDHOOD 


The  bitterness,  the  misery,  the  wretchedness  of  childhood 

Put  me  out  of  love  with  God. 

I  can't  believe  in  God's  goodness ; 

I  can  believe 

In  many  avenging  gods. 

Most  of  all  I  believe 

In  gods  of  bitter  dullness, 

Cruel  local  gods 

Who  seared  my  childhood. 

II 

I  Ve  seen  people  put 

A  chrysalis  in  a  match-box, 

"To  see,"  they  told  me,  **  what  sort  of  moth  would  come." 

But  when  it  broke  its  shell 

It  slipped  and  stumbled  and  fell  about  its  prison 

And  tried  to  climb  to  the  light 

For  space  to  dry  its  wings. 

[  3  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

That 's  how  I  was. 
Somebody  found  my  chrysalis 
And  shut  it  in  a  match/box. 
My  shrivelled  wings  were  beaten, 
Shed  their  colours  in  dusty  scales 
Before  the  box  was  opened 
For  the  moth  to  fly. 

And  then  it  was  too  late, 

Because  the  beauty  a  child  has. 

And  the  beautiful  things  it  learns  before  its  birth, 

Were  shed,  like  moth^scales,  from  me. 

Ill 

I  hate  that  town ; 

I  hate  the  town  I  lived  in  when  I  was  Kttle ; 

I  hate  to  think  of  it. 

There  were  always  clouds,  smoke,  rain 

In  that  dingy  little  valley. 

It  rained ;  it  always  rained. 

I  think  I  never  saw  the  sun  until  I  was  nine  — 

And  then  it  was  too  late ; 

Everything 's  too  late  after  the  first  seven  years. 


[4  ] 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 

That  long  street  we  lived  in 

Was  duller  than  a  drain 

And  nearly  as  dingy. 

There  were  the  big  College 

And  the  pseudo<iothic  town^hall. 

There  were  the  sordid  provincial  shops  — 

The  grocer's,  and  the  shops  tor  women, 

The  shop  where  1  bought  transfers, 

And  the  piano  and  gramaphone  shop 

Where  I  used  to  stand 

Staring  at  the  huge  shiny  pianos  and  at  the  pictures 

Of  a  white  dog  looking  into  a  gramaphone. 

How  dull  and  greasy  and  grey  and  sordid  it  was  1 

On  wet  days  —  it  was  always  wet  — 

I  used  to  kneel  on  a  chair 

And  look  at  it  from  the  window. 

The  dirty  yellow  trams 

Dragged  noisily  along 

With  a  clatter  of  wheels  and  bells 

And  a  humming  of  wires  overhead. 

They  threw  up  the  filthy  rain^uater  from  the  hollow  lines 

And  then  the  water  ran  back 

Full  of  brownish  foam  bubbles. 

[5  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

There  was  nothing  else  to  see  — 

It  was  all  so  dull  — 

Except  a  few  grey  legs  under  shiny  black  umbrellas 

Running  along  the  grey  shiny  pavements ; 

Sometimes  there  was  a  waggon 

Whose  horses  made  a  strange  loud  hollow  sound 

With  their  hoofs 

Through  the  silent  rain. 

And  there  was  a  grey  museum 

Full  of  dead  birds  and  dead  insects  and  dead  animals 

And  a  few  relics  of  the  Romans  —  dead  also. 

There  was  the  sea^front, 

A  long  asphalt  walk  with  a  bleak  road  beside  it, 

Three  piers,  a  row  of  houses, 

And  a  salt  dirty  smell  from  the  little  harbour. 

I  was  like  a  moth  — 

Like  one  of  those  grey  Emperor  moths 

Which  flutter  through  the  vines  at  Capri. 

And  that  damned  little  town  was  my  match-box, 

Against  whose  sides  I  beat  and  beat 

Until  my  wings  were  torn  and  faded,  and  dingy 

As  that  damned  little  town. 


[0] 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 

IV 

At  school  it  was  just  as  dull  as  that  dull  High  Street. 

They  taught  me  pothooks  — 

I  wanted  to  be  alone,  although  I  was  so  little, 

Alone,  away  from  the  rain,  the  dingyness,  the  dullness, 

Away  somewhere  else  — 

The  town  was  dull ; 

The  front  was  dull ; 

The  High  Street  and  the  other  street  were  dull  — 

And  there  was  a  public  park,  I  remember. 

And  that  was  damned  dull  too, 

With  its  beds  of  geraniums  no  one  was  allowed  to  pick. 

And  its  clipped  lawns  you  were  n't  allowed  to  walk  on, 

And  the  gold-fish  pond  you  must  n't  paddle  in. 

And  the  gate  made  out  of  a  whale's  jaw-bones. 

And  the  swings,  which  were  for  "  Board^School  children," 

And  its  gravel  paths. 

And  on  Sundays  they  rang  the  bells, 
From  Baptist  and  Evangelical  and  Catholic  churches. 
They  had  the  Salvation  Army. 
I  was  taken  to  a  High  Church ; 
The  parson's  name  was  Mowbray, 

"  Which  is  a  good  name  but  he  thinks  too  much  of  it  — " 
That 's  what  I  heard  people  say. 

[7  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

I  took  a  little  black  book 

To  that  cold,  grey,  damp,  smelling  church, 

And  I  had  to  sit  on  a  hard  bench, 

Wriggle  off  it  to  kneel  down  when  they  sang  psalms, 

Aud  wriggle  off  it  to  kneel  down  when  they  prayed - 

And  then  there  was  nothing  to  do 

Except  to  play  trains  with  the  hymn-'books. 

There  was  nothing  to  see. 

Nothing  to  do. 

Nothing  to  play  with. 

Except  that  in  an  empty  room  upstairs 

There  was  a  large  tin  box 

Containing  reproductions  of  the  Magna  Charta, 

Of  the  Declaration  of  Independence 

And  of  a  letter  from  Raleigh  after  the  Armada. 

There  were  also  several  packets  of  stamps, 

Yellow  and  blue  Guatemala  parrots. 

Blue  stags  and  red  baboons  and  birds  from  Sarawak, 

Indians  and  Men/of'-war 

From  the  United  States, 

And  the  green  and  red  portraits 

Of  King  Francobollo 

Of  Italy. 


[  8  ] 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 

V 

I  don't  believe  in  God. 

I  do  believe  in  avenging  gods 

Who  plague  us  for  sins  we  never  sinned 

But  who  avenge  us. 

That 's  why  I  '11  never  have  a  child, 

Never  shut  up  a  chrysalis  in  a  match^'box 

For  the  moth  to  spoil  and  crush  its  bright  colours, 

Beating  its  wings  against  the  dingy  prison-'wall. 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


THE    POPLAR 

Why  do  you  always  stand  there  shivering 
Between  the  white  stream  and  the  road  ? 

The  people  pass  through  the  dust 

On  bicycles,  in  carts,  in  motor-cars ; 

The  waggoners  go  by  at  dawn ; 

The  lovers  walk  on  the  grass  path  at  night. 

Stir  from  your  roots,  walk,  poplar  ! 
You  are  more  beautiful  than  they  are. 

I  know  that  the  white  wind  loves  you, 

Is  always  kissing  you  and  turning  up 

The  white  lining  of  your  green  petticoat. 

The  sky  darts  through  you  like  blue  rain, 

And  the  grey  rain  drips  on  your  flanks 

And  loves  you. 

And  I  have  seen  the  moon 

Slip  his  silver  penny  into  your  pocket 

As  you  straightened  your  hair ; 

And  the  white  mist  curling  and  hesitating 

Like  a  bashful  lover  about  your  knees. 

[  10  ] 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 

I  know  you,  poplar ; 

I  have  watched  you  since  I  was  ten. 

But  if  you  had  a  little  real  love, 

A  little  strength, 

You  would  leave  your  nonchalant  idle  lovers 

And  go  walking  down  the  white  road 

Behind  the  waggoners. 

There  are  beautiful  beeches  down  beyond  the  hill. 
Will  you  always  stand  there  shivering? 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


ROUND^POND 

Water  ruffled  and  speckled  by  galloping  wind 
Which  puffs  and  spurts  it  into  tiny  pashing  breakers 
Dashed  with  lemon/yellow  afternoon  sunlight. 
The  shining  of  the  sun  upon  the  water 
Is  like  a  scattering  of  gold  crocus^petals 
In  a  long  wavering  irregular  flight. 

The  water  is  cold  to  the  eye 
As  the  wind  to  the  cheek. 

In  the  budding  chestnuts 

Whose  sticky  buds  glimmer  and  are  half'burst  open 

The  starlings  make  their  clitter /clatter ; 

And  the  blackbirds  in  the  grass 

Are  getting  as  fat  as  the  pigeons. 

Too/hoo,  this  is  brave ; 

Even  the  cold  wind  is  seeking  a  new  mistress. 


[  12  ] 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 


DAISY 

"  Plus  quam  se  atque  suos  amavit  omne^t 
Nunc  .   .   ." 

Catullus. 

You  were  my  playmate  by  the  sea. 

We  swam  together. 

Your  girl's  body  had  no  breasts. 

We  found  prawns  among  the  rocks ; 

We  liked  to  feel  the  sun  and  to  do  nothing ; 

In  the  evening  we  played  games  with  the  others. 

It  made  me  glad  to  be  by  you. 

Sometimes  I  kissed  you, 

And  you  were  always  glad  to  kiss  me ; 

But  I  was  afraid  —  I  was  only  fourteen. 

And  I  had  quite  forgotten  you, 
You  and  your  name. 

To-day  I  pass  through  the  streets. 
She  who  touches  my  arm  and  talks  with  me 

[   '3  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Is  —  who  knows?  —  Helen  of  Sparta, 
Dryope,  Laodamia.  .  .  . 

And  there  are  you 

A  whore  in  Oxford  Street. 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 


EPIGRAMS 
A    GIRL 

You  were  that  clear  Sicilian  fluting 
That  pains  our  thought  even  now. 
You  were  the  notes 
Of  cold  fantastic  grief 
Some  few  found  beautiful. 

NEW  LOVE 

She  has  new  leaves 
After  her  dead  flowers, 
Like  the  little  almond^tree 
Which  the  frost  hurt. 

OCTOBER 

The  beech^eaves  are  silver 
For  lack  of  the  tree's  blood. 

At  your  kiss  my  lips 

Become  like  the  autumn  beech/leaves. 


[  '5] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


the  faun  sees  snow  for  the  first  time 

Zeus, 

Brazen^thunder/'hurler, 

Cloud^'whirler,  son^of''Kronos, 

Send  vengeance  on  these  Oreads 

Who  strew 

White  frozen  flecks  of  mist  and  cloud 

Over  the  brown  trees  and  the  tufted  grass 

Of  the  meadows,  where  the  stream 

Runs  black  through  shining  banks 

Of  bluish  white. 

Zeus, 

Are  the  halls  of  heaven  broken  up 
That  you  flake  down  upon  me 
Feather^strips  of  marble? 

Dis  and  Styx ! 

When  I  stamp  my  hoof 

The  frozen^cloud/specks  jam  into  the  cleft 

So  that  I  reel  upon  two  slippery  points.  .  .  . 

Fool,  to  stand  here  cursing 
When  I  might  be  running ! 

[  i6  ] 


RICHARD  ALDINGTON 


LEMURES 

In  Nineveh 

And  beyond  Nineveh 

In  the  dusk 

They  were  afraid. 

In  Thebes  of  Egypt 

In  the  dusk 

They  chanted  of  them  to  the  dead. 

In  my  Lesbos  and  Achaia 
Where  the  God  dwelt 
We  knew  them. 

Now  men  say  "  They  are  not " : 

But  in  the  dusk 

Ere  the  white  sun  comes  — 

A  gay  child  that  bears  a  white  candle 

I  am  afraid  of  their  rustb'ng, 

Of  their  terrible  silence, 

The  menace  of  their  secrecy. 


[  »7] 


H.  D. 


H.  D. 


THE     POOL 


Are  you  alive? 

1  touch  you. 

You  quiver  like  a  sea-'fish. 

I  cover  you  with  my  net. 

What  are  you  —  banded  one  ? 


[    21    ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

THE    GARDEN 
I 

You  are  clear, 

0  rose,  cut  in  rock, 

hard  as  the  descent  of  hail. 

1  could  scrape  the  colour 
from  the  petal, 

like  spilt  dye  from  a  rock. 

If  1  could  break  you 
I  could  break  a  tree. 

If  1  could  stir 

I  could  break  a  tree, 

I  could  break  you. 

II 
O  wind, 

rend  open  the  heat, 
cut  apart  the  heat, 
rend  it  sideways. 

Fruit  can  not  drop 
through  this  thick  air : 

[    22    ] 


H.   D. 

fruit  can  not  fall  into  heat 
that  presses  up  and  blunts 
the  points  of  pears 
and  rounds  the  grapes. 

Cut  the  heat, 
plough  through  it, 
turning  it  on  either  side 
of  your  path. 


[23] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


SEA    LILY 

Reed, 

slashed  and  torn, 

but  doubly  rich  — 

such  great  heads  as  yours 

drift  upon  temple^steps, 

but  you  are  shattered 

in  the  wind. 

Myrtle^bark 

is  flecked  ft^om  you, 

scales  are  dashed 

from  your  stem, 

sand  cuts  your  petal, 

furrows  it  with  hard  edge, 

like  flint 

on  a  bright  stone. 

Yet  though  the  whole  wind 
slash  at  your  bark, 
you  are  lifted  up, 
aye  —  though  it  hiss 
to  cover  you  with  froth. 

[  24] 


H.  D. 


SEA    IRIS 


I 

Weed,  moss^weed, 
root  tangled  in  sand, 
sea-'iris,  brittle  flower, 
one  petal  like  a  shell 
is  broken, 

and  you  print  a  shadow 
like  a  thin  twig. 

Fortunate  one, 

scented  and  stinging, 

rigid  myrrh'-bud, 

camphor/flower, 

sweet  and  salt  —  you  are  wind 

in  our  nostrils. 

II 

Do  the  murex'-fishers 

drench  you  as  they  pass  ? 

Do  your  roots  drag  up  colour 

from  the  sand  ? 

Have  they  slipped  gold  under  you ; 

rivets  of  gold .? 

[  25  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Band  of  iris^flowers 
above  the  waves, 
You  are  painted  blue, 
painted  like  a  fresh  prow 
stained  among  the  salt  weeds. 


[  ^6] 


H.  D. 


SEA    ROSE 

Rose,  harsh  rose, 

marred  and  with  stint  of  petals, 

meagre  tiower,  thin, 

sparse  of  leaf, 

more  precious 

than  a  wet  rose, 

single  on  a  stem  — 

you  are  caught  in  the  drift. 

Stunted,  with  small  leaf, 

you  are  flung  on  the  sands, 

you  are  lifted 

in  the  crisp  sand 

that  drives  in  the  wind. 

Can  the  spice^rose 

drip  such  acrid  fragrance 

hardened  in  a  leaf  ? 


[  27  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


OREAD 

Whirl  up,  sea  — 

Whirl  your  pointed  pines, 

Splash  your  great  pines 

On  our  rocks, 

Hurl  your  green  over  us, 

Cover  us  with  your  pools  of  fir. 


[  28  ] 


H.  D. 

ORION    DEAD 

\_Jrlemis  speaks"] 

The  cornel''trees 

uplift  trom  the  furrows, 

the  roots  at  their  bases 

strike  lower  through  the  barley -'sprays. 

So  arise  and  tace  me. 

I  am  poisoned  with  the  rage  of  song, 

/  once  pierced  the  flesh 

of  the  wild-deer y 

now  am  I  afraid  to  touch 

the  blue  and  the  gold-veined  hyacinths  ? 

I  will  tear  the  full  flowers 

and  the  little  heads 

of  the  grape-hyacinths. 

I  will  strip  the  life  from  the  bulb 

until  the  ivory  layers 

lie  like  narcissus  petals 

on  the  black  earth. 

Arise^ 

lest  I  bend  an  ash-tree 
into  a  taut  bow^ 
and  slay  —  and  tear 
all  the  roots  from  the  earth. 
[  29  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

The  cornel^wood  blazes 

and  strikes  through  the  barley -'Sprays, 

but  1  have  lost  heart  for  this. 

I  break  a  staff. 

1  break  the  tough  branch. 

I  know  no  light  in  the  woods. 

1  have  lost  pace  with  the  winds. 


[  30  ] 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 


THE   BLUE   SYMPHONY 


The  darkness  rolls  upward. 
The  thick  darkness  carries  with  it 
Rain  and  a  ravel  of  cloud. 
The  sun  comes  forth  upon  earth. 

Palely  the  dawn 

Leaves  me  facing  timidly 

Old  gardens  sunken : 

And  in  the  gardens  is  water. 

Sombre  wreck  —  autumnal  leaves ; 

Shadowy  roofs 

In  the  blue  mist, 

And  a  willow^branch  that  is  broken, 

O  old  pagodas  of  my  soul,  how  you  glittered  across 
green  trees ! 

[  33  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Blue  and  cool : 

Blue,  tremulously, 

Blow  faint  puffs  of  smoke 

Across  sombre  pools. 

The  damp  green  smell  of  rotted  wood  ; 

And  a  heron  that  cries  from  out  the  water. 

II 

Through  the  upland  meadows 
I  go  alone. 

For  I  dreamed  of  someone  last  night 
Who  is  waiting  for  me. 

Flower  and  blossom,  tell  me  do  you  know  of  her  ? 

Have  the  rocks  hidden  her  voice  ? 
They  are  very  blue  and  still. 

Long  upward  road  that  is  leading  me, 
Light  hearted  I  quit  you, 
For  the  long  loose  ripples  of  the  meadow-grass 
Invite  me  to  dance  upon  them. 

Quivering  grass 
Daintily  poised 
For  her  foot's  tripping. 

[34] 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 

O  blown  clouds,  could  I  only  race  up  like  you, 
Oh,  the  last  slopes  that  are  sun-drenched  and  steep ! 

Look,  the  sky! 

Across  black  valleys 

Rise  blue^white  aloft 

Jagged,  unwrinkled  mountains,  ranges  of  death. 

Solitude.   Silence. 

Ill 

One  chuckles  by  the  brook  for  me  : 
One  rages  under  the  stone. 
One  makes  a  spout  of  his  mouth, 
One  whispers  —  one  is  gone. 

One  over  there  on  the  water 
Spreads  cold  ripples 
For  me 
Enticingly. 

The  vast  dark  trees 
Flow  like  blue  veils 
Of  tears 
Jnto  the  water. 

[  35  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Sour  sprites, 

Moaning  and  chuckling, 

What  have  you  hidden  from  me  ? 

"  In  the  palace  of  the  blue  stone  she  lies  forever 
Bound  hand  and  foot." 

Was  it  the  wind 

That  rattled  the  reeds  together  ? 

Dry  reeds, 

A  faint  shiver  in  the  grasses. 

IV 

On  the  left  hand  there  is  a  temple: 
And  a  palace  on  the  right  •'hand  side. 
Foot-passengers  in  scarlet 
Pass  over  the  glittering  tide. 

Under  the  bridge 
The  old  river  flows 
Low  and  monotonous 
Day  after  day. 

I  have  heard  and  have  seen 
All  the  news  that  has  been : 
Autumn's  gold  and  Spring's  green ! 

[36] 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 

Now  in  my  palace 
I  see  foot/passengers 
Crossing  the  river : 
Pilgrims  of  Autumn 
In  the  afternoons. 

Lotus  pools : 
Petals  in  the  water. 
Such  are  my  dreams. 

For  me  silks  are  outspread. 
I  take  my  ease,  unthinking. 


And  now  the  lowest  pine^branch 
Is  drawn  across  the  disk  of  the  sun. 
Old  friends  who  will  forget  me  soon 
I  must  go  on, 

Towards  those  blue  death-'mountains 
I  have  forgot  so  long. 

In  the  marsh  grasses 
There  lies  forever 
My  last  treasure, 
With  the  hope  of  my  heart. 

[  11  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

The  ice  is  glazing  over, 
Torn  lanterns  flutter, 
On  the  leaves  is  snow. 

In  the  frosty  evening 
Toll  the  old  bell  for  me 
Once,  in  the  sleepy  temple. 

Perhaps  my  soul  will  hear. 

Afterglow : 

Before  the  stars  peep 

I  shall  creep  out  into  darkness. 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 


london   excursion 

'bus 

Great  walls  of  green, 
City  that  is  afar. 

We  gallop  along 
Alert  and  penetrating, 
Roads  open  about  us, 
Housetops  keep  at  a  distance. 

Soft^curling  tendrils, 

Swim  backwards  from  our  image : 

We  are  a  red  bulk, 

Projecting  the  angular  city,  in  shadows,  at  our  feet. 

Black  coarse/'squared  shapes, 
Hump  and  growl  and  assemble. 
It  is  the  city  that  takes  us  to  itself. 
Vast  thunder  riding  down  strange  skies. 

An  arch  under  which  we  slide 
Divides  our  lives  for  us : 
After  we  have  passed  it 

[   39  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

We  know  we  have  left  something  behind 
We  shall  not  see  again. 

Passivity, 

Gravity, 

Are  changed  into  hesitating,  clanking  pistons  and 

wheels. 
The  trams  come  whooping  up  one  by  one, 
Yellow  pulse^'beats  spreading  through  darkness. 

Music-'hall  posters  squall  out : 

The  passengers  shrink  together, 

I  enter  indelicately  into  all  their  souls. 

It  is  a  glossy  skating  rink, 

On  which  winged  spirals  clasp  and  bend  each  other : 
And  suddenly  slide  backwards  towards  the  centre. 
After  a  too^brief  release. 

A  second  arch  is  a  wall 

To  separate  our  souls  from  rotted  cables 

Of  stale  greenness. 

A  shadow  cutting  off  the  country  from  us. 
Out  of  it  rise  red  walls. 

[40  ] 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 

Yet  I  revolt :  I  bend,  I  twist  myself] 
I  curl  into  a  million  convolutions : 
Pink  shapes  without  angle, 
Anything  to  be  soft  and  woolly, 
Anything  to  escape. 

Sudden  lurch  of  clamours, 
Two  more  viaducts 
Stretch  out  red  yokes  of  steel. 
Crushing  my  rebellion. 

My  soul 

Shrieking 

Is  jolted  forwards  by  a  long  hot  bar  — 

Into  direct  distances. 

It  pierces  the  small  of  my  back. 

APPROACH 

Only  this  morning  I  sang  of  roses ; 

Now  I  see  with  a  swift  stare, 

The  city  forcing  up  through  the  air 

Black  cubes  close  piled  and  some  half-'crumbling  over. 

My  roses  are  battered  into  pulp : 
And  there  swells  up  in  me 

[41  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Sudden  desire  for  something  changeless, 
Thrusts  of  sunless  rock 
Unmelted  by  hissing  wheels. 


ARRIVAL 

Here  is  too  swift  a  movement, 
The  rest  is  too  still. 

It  is  a  red  sea 

Licking 

The  housefronts. 

They  quiver  gently 

From  base  to  summit. 

Ripples  of  impulse  run  through  them, 

Flattering  resistance. 

Soon  they  will  fall ; 

Already  smoke  yearns  upward. 

Clouds  of  dust, 

Crash  of  collapsing  cubes. 

I  prefer  deeper  patience, 

Monotony  of  stalled  beasts. 

O  angle  ^builders, 

[42  ] 


JOHN  GOULD   ILlTCin-.R 

Vainly  have  you  prolonged  your  effort, 

For  I  descend  aniid  you, 

Past  rungs  and  slopes  of  curving  slip[-)ery  steel. 

WALK 

Sudden  struggle  for  foothold  on  the  pavement, 
Familiar  ascension. 

I  do  not  heed  the  city  any  more, 

It  has  given  me  a  duty  to  perform. 

I  pass  along  nonchalantlv. 

Insinuating  myself  into  selfbaffling  movements. 

Impalpable  charm  of  back  streets 

In  which  I  find  myself: 

Cool  spaces  filled  with  shadow, 

Passers-'by,  white  hammocks  in  the  sunlight. 

Bulging  outcrush  into  old  tumult ; 
Attainment,  as  of  a  narrow  harbour, 
Of  some  shop  forgotten  by  trartic 
With  cool^corridored  walls. 

'BUS/TOP 

Black  shapes  bending, 
Taxicabs  crush  in  the  crowd. 

L  ^^  J 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

The  tops  are  each  a  shining  square 

Shuttles  that  steadily  press  through  woolly  fabric. 

Drooping  blossom, 
Gas/standards  over 
Spray  out  jingling  tumult 
Of  white-hot  rays. 

Monotonous  domes  of  bowler^'hats 
Vibrate  in  the  heat. 

Silently,  easily  we  sway  through  braying  traffic, 
Down  the  crowded  street. 
The  tumult  crouches  over  us. 
Or  suddenly  drifts  to  one  side. 

TRANSPOSITION 

I  AM  blown  like  a  leaf 

Hither  and  thither. 

The  city  about  me 

Resolves  itself  into  sound  of  many  voices, 

Rustling  and  fluttering, 

Leaves  shaken  by  the  breeze. 

A  million  forces  ignore  me,  I  know  not  why, 
I  am  drunken  with  it  all. 

[  44  ] 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 

Suddenly  I  feel  an  immense  will 

Stored  up  hitherto  and  unconscious  till  this  instant. 

Projecting  my  body 

Across  a  street,  in  the  face  of  all  its  traffic. 

I  dart  and  dash : 
I  do  not  know  why  I  go. 
These  people  watch  me, 
I  yield  them  my  adventure. 

Lazily  I  lounge  through  labyrinthine  corridors. 

And  with  eyes  suddenly  altered, 

I  peer  into  an  office  I  do  not  know, 

And  wonder  at  a  startled  face  that  penetrates  my  own. 

Roses  —  pavement  — 

I  will  take  all  this  city  away  with  me  — 

People  —  uproar  —  the  pavement  jostling  and 

flickering  — 
Women  w^ith  incredible  eyelids: 
Dandies  in  spats: 

Hard-faced  throng  discussing  me  —  I  know  them  all. 
I  will  take  them  away  with  me, 
I  insistently  rob  them  of  their  essence, 
I  must  have  it  all  before  night, 
To  sing  amid  my  green. 

[45   ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

I  glide  out  unobservant 

In  the  midst  of  the  traffic 

Blown  like  a  leaf 

Hither  and  thither, 

Till  the  city  resolves  itself  into  a  clamour  of  voices, 

Crying  hollowly,  like  the  wind  rustling  through  the  forest, 

Against  the  frozen  housefronts : 

Lost  in  the  glitter  of  a  million  movements. 

PERIPETEIA 

I  CAN  no  longer  find  a  place  for  myself: 
I  go. 

There  are  too  many  things  to  detain  me, 
But  the  force  behind  is  reckless. 

Noise,  uproar,  movement 
Slide  me  outwards, 
Black  sleet  shivering 
Down  red  walls. 

In  thick  jungles  of  green,  this  gyration, 
My  centrifugal  folly, 

Through  roaring  dust  and  futility  spattered. 
Will  find  its  own  repose. 

[46  ] 


JOHN  GOULD  FLETCHER 

Golden  lights  will  gleam  out  sullenly  into  silence, 
Before  1  return. 


MID^FLIGHT 

We  rush,  a  black  throng, 
Straight  upon  darkness : 
Motes  scattered 
By  the  arc's  rays. 

Over  the  bridge  fluttering, 
It  is  theatre^time, 
No  one  heeds. 

Lost  amid  greenness 

We  will  sleep  all  night ; 

And  in  the  morning 

Coming  forth,  we  will  shake  wet  wings 

Over  the  settled  dust  of  to-day. 

The  city  hurls  its  cobbled  streets  after  us. 
To  drive  us  faster. 

We  must  attain  the  night 
Before  endless  processions 
Of  lamps 

[  47  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Push  us  back. 

A  clock  with  quivering  hands 

Leaps  to  the  trajectory -'angle  of  our  departure. 

We  leave  behind  pale  traces  of  achievement: 
Fires  that  we  kindled  but  were  too  tired  to  put  out, 
Broad  gold  fans  brushing  softly  over  dark  walls, 
Stilled  uproar  of  night. 

We  are  already  cast  forth  : 

The  signal  of  our  departure 

Jerks  down  before  we  have  learned  we  are  to  go. 

STATION 

We  descend 
Into  a  wall  of  green. 
Straggling  shapes : 
Afterwards  none  are  seen. 

I  find  myself 

Alone. 

I  look  back : 

The  city  has  grown. 

One  grey  wall 
Windowed,  unlit. 

[48  ] 


JOHN  GOULD   FLETCHER 

Heavily,  night 
Crushes  the  face  of  it. 


I  go  on. 

My  memories  freeze 
Like  birds'  cry 
In  hollow  trees. 

I  go  on. 

Up  and  outright 
To  the  hostility 
Of  night. 


F.  S.  FLINT 


U3RARY 
UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFCRf^lA 


F.  S.  FLINT 

TREES 

Elm  trees 

and  the  leaf  the  boy  in  me  hated 

long  ago  — 

rough  and  sandy. 

Poplars 

and  their  leaves, 

tender,  smooth  to  the  fingers, 

and  a  secret  in  their  smell 

I  have  forgotten. 

Oaks 

and  forest  glades, 

heart  aching  with  wonder,  fear: 

their  bitter  mast. 

Willows 

and  the  scented  beetle 

we  put  in  our  handkerchiefs ; 

and  the  roots  of  one 

[  53  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

that  spread  into  a  river  : 
nakedness,  water  and  joy. 

Hawthorn, 

white  and  odorous  with  blossom, 

framing  the  quiet  fields, 

and  swaying  flowers  and  grasses, 

and  the  hum  of  bees. 

Oh,  these  are  the  things  that  are  with  me  now, 

in  the  town ; 

and  I  am  grateful 

for  this  minute  of  my  manhood. 


F.  S.  FLINT 


LUNCH 

Frail  beauty, 

green,  gold  and  incandescent  whiteness, 

narcissi,  daffodils, 

you  have  brought  me  Spring  and  longing, 

wistfulness, 

in  your  irradiance. 

Therefore,  I  sit  here 

among  the  people, 

dreaming, 

and  my  heart  aches 

with  all  the  hawthorn  blossom, 

the  bees  humming, 

the  light  wind  upon  the  poplars, 

and  your  warmth  and  your  love 

and  your  eyes  .  .  . 

they  smile  and  know  me. 


[55] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


MALADY 
I  MOVE ; 

perhaps  I  have  wakened ; 

this  is  a  bed ; 

this  is  a  room ; 

and  there  is  light  .  .  . 

Darkness ! 

Have  I  performed 
the  dozen  acts  or  so 
that  make  me  the  man 
men  see  ? 

The  door  opens, 

and  on  the  landing  — 

quiet ! 

I  can  see  nothing:  the  pain,  the  weariness! 

Stairs,  banisters,  a  handrail: 
all  indistinguishable. 
One  step  farther  down  or  up, 
and  why  ? 

But  up  is  harder.  Down  ! 
[  56  ] 


F.  S.  FLINT 

Down  to  this  white  blur ; 
it  gives  before  me. 

Me? 

I  extend  all  ways : 

I  fit  into  the  walls  and  they  pull  me. 

Light.? 

Light !   I  know  it  is  light. 

Stillness,  and  then, 

something  moves: 

green,  oh  green,  dazzling  lightning ! 

And  joy!  this  is  my  room; 

there  are  my  books,  there  the  piano, 

there  the  last  bar  I  wrote, 

there  the  last  line, 

and  oh  the  sunlight ! 

A  parrot  screeches. 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


ACCIDENT 

Dear  one  ! 

you  sit  there 

in  the  corner  of  the  carriage; 

and  you  do  not  know  me ; 

and  your  eyes  forbid. 

Is  it  the  dirt,  the  squalor, 

the  wear  of  human  bodies, 

and  the  dead  faces  of  our  neighbours  ? 

These  are  but  symbols. 

You  are  proud ;  I  praise  you ; 

your  mouth  is  set;  you  see  beyond  us; 

and  you  see  nothing. 

I  have  the  vision  of  your  calm,  cold  face, 
and  of  the  black  hair  that  waves  above  it ; 
I  watch  you ;  I  love  you ; 
I  desire  you. 

There  is  a  quiet  here 

within  the  thud^thud  ofthe  wheels 

upon  the  railway. 

[  58  ] 


F.   S.  FLINT 

There  is  a  quiet  here 
within  my  heart, 
but  tense  and  tender 

This  is  my  station   . 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


FRAGMENT 


.  .  .  That  night  I  loved  you 
in  the  candlelight. 
Your  golden  hair 

strewed  the  sweet  whiteness  of  the  pillows 
and  the  counterpane. 
O  the  darkness  of  the  corners, 
the  warm  air,  and  the  stars 
framed  in  the  casement  of  the  ships'  lights  ! 
The  waves  lapped  into  the  harbour ; 
the  boats  creaked ; 
a  man's  voice  sang  out  on  the  quay ; 
and  you  loved  me. 

In  your  love  were  the  tall  tree  fuchsias, 
the  blue  of  the  hortensias,  the  scarlet  nasturtiums, 
the  trees  on  the  hills, 
the  roads  we  had  covered, 
and  the  sea  that  had  borne  your  body 
before  the  rocks  of  Hartland. 
You  loved  me  with  these 
and  with  the  kindness  of  people, 
country  folk,  sailors  and  fishermen, 
and  the  old  lady  who  had  lodged  us  and  supped  us. 

[  60] 


F.  S.  FLINT 

You  loved  me  with  yourself 
that  was  these  and  more, 
changed  as  the  earth  is  changed 
into  the  bloom  of  iiowers. 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


HOUSES 

Evening  and  quiet: 

a  bird  trills  in  the  poplar  trees 

behind  the  house  with  the  dark  green  door 

across  the  road. 

Into  the  sky, 

the  red  earthenware  and  the  galvanised  iron  chimneys 

thrust  their  cowls. 

The  hoot  of  the  steamers  on  the  Thames  is  plain. 

No  wind ;  ^ 

the  trees  merge,  green  with  green ; 

a  car  whirs  by ; 

footsteps  and  voices  take  their  pitch 

in  the  key  of  dusk, 

far^-offand  near,  subdued. 

Solid  and  square  to  the  world 

the  houses  stand, 

their  windows  blocked  with  Venetian  blinds. 

Nothing  wiU  move  them. 

[  62  ] 


F.  S.   FLINT 


EAU-TORTE 

On  black  bare  trees  a  stale  cream  moon 
hangs  dead,  and  sours  the  unborn  buds. 

Two  gaunt  old  hacks,  knees  bent,  heads  low, 
tug,  tired  and  spent,  an  old  horse  tram. 

Damp  smoke,  rank  mist  fill  the  dark  square ; 
and  round-the  bend  six  bullocks  come. 

A  hobbling,  dirt^grimed  drover  guides 
their  clattering  feet  to  death  and  shame. 


[63  ] 


D.  H.  LAWRENCE 


D.  H.  LAWRENCE 

BALLAD  OF  ANOTHER   OPHELIA 

Oh,  the  green  glimmer  of  apples  in  the  orchard, 
Lamps  in  a  wash  of  rain. 

Oh,  the  wet  walk  of  my  brown  hen  through  the  stackyard. 
Oh,  tears  on  the  window  pane ! 

Nothing  now  will  ripen  the  bright  green  apples, 

Full  of  disappointment  and  of  rain, 

Brackish  they  will  taste,  of  tears,  when  the  yellow  dapples 

Of  Autumn  tell  the  withered  tale  again. 

All  round  the  yard  it  is  cluck,  my  brown  hen, 
Cluck,  and  the  rain^wet  wings, 
Cluck,  my  marigold  bird,  and  again 
Cluck  for  your  yellow  darlings. 

For  the  grey  rat  found  the  gold  thirteen 

Huddled  away  in  the  dark. 

Flutter  for  a  moment,  oh  the  beast  is  quick  and  keen, 

Extinct  one  yellow-'flufiy  spark. 

[  67  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Once  I  had  a  lover  bright  like  running  water, 
Once  his  face  was  laughing  like  the  sky ; 
Open  like  the  sky  looking  down  in  all  its  laughter 
On  the  buttercups  —  and  buttercups  was  I. 

What  then  is  there  hidden  in  the  skirts  of  all  the  blossom, 

What  is  peeping  from  your  wings,  oh  mother  hen  ? 

'T  is  the  sun  who  asks  the  question,  in  a  lovely  haste  for 

wisdom  — 
What  a  lovely  haste  for  wisdom  is  in  men  ? 

Yea,  but  it  is  cruel  when  undressed  is  all  the  blossom, 

And  her  shift  is  lying  white  upon  the  floor. 

That  a  grey  one,  like  a  shadow,  like  a  rat,  a  thief,  a  rain^ 

storm 
Creeps  upon  her  then  and  gathers  in  his  store. 

Oh,  the  grey  garner  that  is  full  of  half^grown  apples. 

Oh,  the  golden  sparkles  laid  extinct  —  ! 

And  oh,  behind  the  cloud  sheaves,  like  yellow  autumn 

dapples, 
Did  you  see  the  wicked  sun  that  winked  ? 


D.  H.   LAWRENCE 


ILLICIT 

In  front  of  the  sombre  mountains,  a  faint,  lost  ribbon  of 

rainbow, 
And  between  us  and  it,  the  thunder ; 
And  down  below,  in  the  green  wheat,  the  labourers 
Stand  like  dark  stumps,  still  in  the  green  wheat. 

You  are  near  to  me,  and  your  naked  feet  in  their  sandals, 
And  through  the  scent  of  the  balcony's  naked  timber 
I  distinguish  the  scent  of  your  hair ;  so  now  the  limber 
Lightning  falls  from  heaven. 

Adown  the  pale^green,  glacierz-river  floats 
A  dark  boat  through  the  gloom  —  and  whither.? 
The  thunder  roars.   But  still  we  have  each  other. 
The  naked  lightnings  in  the  heaven  dither 
And  disappear.  What  have  we  but  each  other  ? 
The  boat  has  gone. 


[  69] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

FIREFLIES    IN    THE    CORN 

A  Woman  taunts  her  Lover 

Look  at  the  little  darlings  in  the  corn! 

The  rye  is  taller  than  you,  who  think  yourself 

So  high  and  mighty :  look  how  its  heads  are  borne 

Dark  and  proud  in  the  sky,  like  a  number  of  knights 

Passing  with  spears  and  pennants  and  manly  scorn. 

And  always  likely !  — -  Oh,  if  I  could  ride 
With  my  head  held  high^'serene  against  the  sky 
Do  you  think  I  'd  have  a  creature  like  you  at  my  side 
With  your  gloom  and  your  doubt  that  you  love  me  ? 

O  darling  rye, 
How  I  adore  you  for  your  simple  pride  ! 

And  those  bright  fireflies  wafting  in  between 
And  over  the  swaying  cornstalks,  just  above 
All  their  dark-'feathered  helmets,  like  little  green 
Stars  come  low  and  wandering  here  for  love 
Of  this  dark  earth,  and  wandering  all  serene  —  ! 

How  I  adore  you,  you  happy  things,  you  dears 
Riding  the  air  and  carrying  all  the  time 
Your  little  lanterns  behind  you :  it  cheers 

[  70] 


D.  H.   LAWRENCE 

My  heart  to  see  you  settling  and  trying  to  climb 
The  cornstalks,  tipping  with  fire  their  spears. 

All  over  the  corn's  dim  motion,  against  the  blue 
Dark  sky  of  night,  the  wandering  glitter,  the  swarm 
Of  questing  brilliant  things :  —  you  joy,  you  true 
Spirit  of  careless  joy:  ah,  how  I  warm 
My  poor  and  perished  soul  at  the  joy  of  you ! 

The  Man  ansivers  and  she  mocks 

You  're  a  fool,  woman.  I  love  you  and  you  know  I  do  ! 

—  Lord,  take  his  love  away,  it  makes  him  whine. 
And  I  give  you  everything  that  you  want  me  to. 

—  Lord,  dear  Lord,  do  you  think  he  ever  ca?i  shine  ? 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


A  WOMAN  AND  HER  DEAD  HUSBAND 

Ah,  Stern  cold  man, 

How  can  you  lie  so  relentless  hard 

While  I  wash  you  with  weeping  water  ! 

Ah,  face,  carved  hard  and  cold. 

You  have  been  like  this,  on  your  guard 

Against  me,  since  death  began. 

You  masquerader ! 
How  can  you  shame  to  act  this  part 
Of  unswerving  indifference  to  me  ? 
It  is  not  you ;  why  disguise  yourself 
Against  me,  to  break  my  heart. 
You  evader  ? 

You  Ve  a  warm  mouth, 

A  good  warm  mouth  always  sooner  to  soften 

Even  than  your  sudden  eyes. 

Ah  cruel,  to  keep  your  mouth 

Relentless,  however  often 

I  kiss  it  in  drouth. 

You  are  not  he. 

Who  are  you,  lying  in  his  place  on  the  bed 

[  72  ] 


D.  H.  LAWRENCE 

And  rigid  and  indifferent  to  me  ? 
His  mouth,  though  he  laughed  or  sulked 
Was  always  warm  and  red 
And  good  to  me. 

And  his  eyes  could  see 

The  white  moon  hang  like  a  breast  revealed 

By  the  slipping  shawl  of  stars, 

Could  see  the  small  stars  tremble 

As  the  heart  beneath  did  wield 

Systole,  diastole. 

And  he  showed  it  me 

So,  when  he  made  his  love  to  me ; 

And  his  brows  like  rocks  on  the  sea  jut  out, 

And  his  eyes  were  deep  like  the  sea 

With  shadow,  and  he  looked  at  me, 

Till  I  sank  in  him  like  the  sea, 

Awfully. 

Oh,  he  was  multiform  — 

Which  then  was  he  among  the  manifold .? 

The  gay,  the  sorrowful,  the  seer.? 

I  have  loved  a  rich  race  of  men  in  one  — 

—  But  not  this,  this  never^warm 

Metal/cold — ! 

[  73  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Ah,  masquerader ! 

With  your  steel  face  white^enamelled 
Were  you  he,  after  all,  and  I  never 
Saw  you  or  felt  you  in  kissing  ? 

—  Yet  sometimes  my  heart  was  trammelled 
With  fear,  evader! 

You  will  not  stir. 

Nor  hear  me,  not  a  sound. 

—  Then  it  was  you  — 
And  all  this  time  you  were 
Like  this  when  I  lived  with  you. 

It  is  not  true, 

I  am  frightened,  I  am  frightened  of  you 

And  of  everything. 

OGod!  —  God  too 

Has  deceived  me  in  everything. 

In  everything. 


D.  H.  LAWRENCE 


THE  MOWERS 

There  's  four  men  mowing  down  by  the  river; 

I  can  hear  the  sound  of  the  scythe  strokes,  four 
Sharp  breaths  swishing :  —  yea,  but  1 

Am  sorry  for  what 's  i'  store. 

The  first  man  out  o'  the  four  that 's  mowin' 
Is  mine :  I  mun  claim  him  once  for  all: 

—  But  I  'm  sorry  for  him,  on  his  young  feet,  knowin* 
None  o'  the  trouble  he 's  led  to  stall. 

As  he  sees  me  bringin'  the  dinner,  he  lifts 
His  head  as  proud  as  a  deer  that  looks 

Shoulder^deep  out  o'  th'  corn :  and  wipes 
His  scythe  blade  bright,  unhooks 

His  scythe  stone,  an'  over  the  grass  to  me  ! 

—  Lad,  tha  's  gotten  a  chilt  in  me, 
An'  a  man  an'  a  father  tha  'It  ha'e  to  be. 

My  young  slim  lad,  an'  I  'm  sorry  for  thee. 


[  75  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


SCENT  OF  IRISES 

A  FAINT,  sickening  scent  of  irises 

Persists  all  morning.  Here  in  a  jar  on  the  table 

A  fine  proud  spike  of  purple  irises 

Rising  above  the  class-room  litter,  makes  me  unable 

To  see  the  class's  lifted  and  bended  fices 

Save  in  a  broken  pattern,  amid  purple  and  gold  and  sable. 


I  can  smell  the  gorgeous  bog^end,  in  its  breathless 
Dazzle  of  may/blobs,  when  the  marigold  glare  overcast 
You  with  fire  on  your  brow  and  your  cheeks  and  your  chin 

as  you  dipped 
Your  face  in  your  marigold  bunch,  to  touch  and  contrast 
Your  own  dark  mouth  with  the  bridal  faint  lady-smocks 
Dissolved  in  the  golden  sorcery  you  should  not  outlast. 


You  amid  the  bog^end's  yellow  incantation. 
You  sitting  in  the  cowslips  of  the  meadows  above, 
—  Me,  your  shadow  on  the  bog-'flame,  flowery  may^blobs, 
Me  fiill  length  in  the  cowslips,  muttering  you  love  — 
You,  your  soul  like  a  lady^'smock,  lost,  evanescent. 
You,  with  your  face  all  rich,  like  the  sheen  on  a  dove  —  ! 

[  76  ] 


D.  H.  LAWRENCE 

You  are  always  asking,  do  I  remember,  remember 
The  buttercup  bog-'end  where  the  flowers  rose  up 
And  kindled  you  over  deep  with  a  coat  of  gold? 
You  ask  again,  do  the  healing  days  close  up 
The  open  darkness  which  then  drew  us  in. 
The  dark  that  swallows  all,  and  nought  throws  up. 


You  upon  the  dry,  dead  beech /lea  ves,  in  the  fire  of  night 
Burnt  like  a  sacrifice;  —  you  invisible  — 
Only  the  fire  of  darkness,  and  the  scent  of  you  ! 
—  And  yes,  thank  God,  it  still  is  possible 
The  healing  days  shall  close  the  darkness  up 
Wherein  1  breathed  you  like  a  smoke  or  dew. 


Like  vapour,  dew,  or  poison.  Now,  thank  God, 
The  golden  fire  has  gone,  and  your  face  is  ash 
Indistinguishable  in  the  grey,  chill  day. 
The  night  has  burnt  you  out,  at  last  the  good 
Dark  fire  burns  on  untroubled  without  clash 
Of  you  upon  the  dead  leaves  saying  me  yea. 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


GREEN 

The  sky  was  apple^green, 

The  sky  was  green  wine  held  up  in  the  sun, 

The  moon  was  a  golden  petal  between. 

She  opened  her  eyes,  and  green 

They  shone,  clear  like  flowers  undone. 

For  the  first  time,  now  for  the  first  time  seen. 


[  78  ] 


AMY  LOWELL 


AMY  LOWELL 


VENUS   TRANSIENS 


Tell  me, 

Was  Venus  more  beautiful 

Than  you  are, 

When  she  topped 

The  crinkled  waves, 

Drifting  shoreward 

On  her  plaited  shell? 

Was  Botticelli's  vision 

Fairer  than  mine ; 

And  were  the  painted  rosebuds 

He  tossed  his  lady, 

Of  better  worth 

Than  the  words  I  blow  about  you 

To  cover  your  too  great  loveliness 

As  with  a  gauze 

Of  misted  silver  ? 

For  me. 

You  stand  poised 
In  the  blue  and  buoyant  air, 
[  8i  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

Cinctured  by  bright  winds, 

Treading  the  sunlight. 

And  the  waves  which  precede  you 

Ripple  and  stir 

The  sands  at  my  feet. 


AMY  LOWELL 


THE  TRAVELLING   BEAR 

Grass^b LADES  push  up  between  the  cobblestones 

And  catch  the  sun  on  their  tiat  sides 

Shooting  it  back, 

Gold  and  emerald, 

Into  the  eyes  of  passers-by. 

And  over  the  cobblestones, 

Square^footed  and  heavy. 

Dances  the  trained  bear. 

The  cobbles  cut  his  feet, 

And  he  has  a  ring  in  his  nose 

Which  hurts  him ; 

But  still  he  dances. 

For  the  keeper  pricks  him  with  a  sharp  stick, 

Under  his  fiir. 


Now  the  crowd  gapes  and  chuckles, 

And  boys  and  young  women  shuffle  their  feet  in  time  to 

the  dancing  bear. 
They  see  him  wobbling 
Against  a  dust  of  emerald  and  gold, 
And  they  are  greatly  delighted. 

[  83  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


The  legs  of  the  bear  shake  with  fatigue 

And  his  back  aches, 

And  the  shining  grass^blades  dazzle  and  confuse  him. 

But  still  he  dances, 

Because  of  the  little,  pointed  stick. 


AMY  LOWELL 


THE  LETTER 


Little  cramped  words  scrawling  all  over  the  paper 

Like  draggled  liy's  legs, 

What  can  you  tell  of  the  flaring  moon 

Through  the  oak  leaves  ? 

Or  of  my  uncurtained  window  and  the  bare  floor 

Spattered  with  moonlight  ? 

Your  silly  quirks  and  twists  have  nothing  in  them 

Of  blossoming  hawthorns, 

And  this  paper  is  dull,  crisp,  smooth,  virgin  of  loveliness 

Beneath  my  hand. 

I  am  tired.  Beloved,  of  chafing  my  heart  against 

The  want  of  you; 

Of  squeezing  it  into  little  inkdrops. 

And  posting  it. 

And  I  scald  alone,  here,  under  the  fire 

Of  the  great  moon. 


[  85  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


GROTESQUE 

Why  do  the  lilies  goggle  their  tongues  at  me 

When  I  pluck  them ; 

And  writhe,  and  twist, 

And  strangle  themselves  against  my  fingers, 

So  that  I  can  hardly  weave  the  garland 

For  your  hair  ? 

Why  do  they  shriek  your  name 

And  spit  at  me 

When  I  would  cluster  them  ? 

Must  I  kill  them 

To  make  them  lie  still, 

And  send  you  a  wreath  of  lolling  corpses 

To  turn  putrid  and  soft 

On  your  forehead 

While  you  dance  ? 


[86] 


AMY  LOWELL 


BULLION 

My  thoughts 

Chink  against  my  ribs 

And  roll  about  like  silver  hailz-stones. 

I  should  like  to  spill  them  out, 

And  pour  them,  all  shining. 

Over  you. 

But  my  heart  is  shut  upon  them 

And  holds  them  straitly. 

Come,  You !  and  open  my  heart ; 

That  my  thoughts  torment  me  no  longer. 

But  glitter  in  your  hair. 


[  87  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 


SOLITAIRE 


When  night  drifts  along  the  streets  of  the  city, 

And  sifts  down  between  the  uneven  roofs, 

My  mind  begins  to  peek  and  peer. 

It  plays  at  ball  in  old,  blue  Chinese  gardens, 

And  shakes  wrought  dice^cups  in  Pagan  temples, 

Amid  the  broken  flutings  of  white  pillars. 

It  dances  with  purple  and  yellow  crocuses  in  its  hair. 

And  its  feet  shine  as  they  flutter  over  drenched  grasses. 

How  light  and  laughing  my  mind  is. 

When  all  the  good  folk  have  put  out  their  bed^room  candles. 

And  the  city  is  still ! 


[88  ] 


AMY  LOWELL 


THE    BOMBARDMENT 

Slowly,  without  force,  the  rain  drops  into  the  city.  It 
stops  a  moment  on  the  carved  head  of  Saint  John,  then  slides 
on  again,  slipping  and  trickling  over  his  stone  cloak.  It 
splashes  from  the  lead  conduit  of  a  gargoyle,  and  falls  from 
it  in  turmoil  on  the  stones  in  the  Cathedral  square.  Where 
are  the  people,  and  why  does  the  fretted  steeple  sweep  about 
in  the  sky?  Boom !  The  sound  swings  against  the  rain.  Boom, 
again !  After  it,  only  water  rushing  in  the  gutters,  and  the 
turmoil  from  the  spout  of  the  gargoyle.  Silence.  Ripples 
and  mutters.  Boom! 

The  room  is  damp,  but  warm.  Little  flashes  swarm  about 
from  the  firelight.  The  lustres  of  the  chandelier  are  bright, 
and  clusters  of  rubies  leap  in  the  bohemian  glasses  on  the 
etagere.  Her  hands  are  restless,  but  the  white  masses  of  her 
hair  are  quite  still.  Boom !  Will  it  never  cease  to  torture,  this 
iteration !  Boom !  The  vibration  shatters  a  glass  on  the  eta^ 
gere.  It  lies  there  formless  and  glowing,  with  all  its  crimson 
gleams  shot  out  of  pattern,  spilled,  flowing  red,  blood^red. 
A  thin  bell^note  pricks  through  the  silence.  A  door  creaks. 
The  old  lady  speaks:  "  Victor,  clear  away  that  broken  glass." 
"Alas!  Madame,  the  bohemian  glass!"  "Yes,  Victor,  one 
hundred  years  ago  my  father  brought  it  —  "  Boom !  The 

[  89  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

room  shakes,  the  servitor  quakes.    Another  goblet  shivers 
and  breaks.  Boom! 

It  rustles  at  the  window/pane,  the  smooth,  streaming 
rain,  and  he  is  shut  w^ithin  its  clash  and  murmur.  Inside  is 
his  candle,  his  table,  his  ink,  his  pen,  and  his  dreams.  He  is 
thinking,  and  the  walls  are  pierced  with  beams  of  sunshine, 
slipping  through  young  green.  A  fountain  tosses  itself  up  at 
the  blue  sky,  and  through  the  spattered  water  in  the  basin 
he  can  see  copper  carp,  lazily  floating  among  cold  leaves. 
A  wind^harp  in  a  cedar^tree  grieves  and  whispers,  and  words 
blow  into  his  brain,  bubbled,  iridescent,  shooting  up  Hke 
flowers  of  fire,  higher  and  higher.  Boom !  The  flame-'flowers 
snap  on  their  slender  stems.  The  fountain  rears  up  in  long 
broken  spears  of  disheveled  water  and  flattens  into  the  earth. 
Boom !  And  there  is  only  the  room,  the  table,  the  candle, 
and  the  sliding  rain.  Again,  Boom !  —  Boom ! —  Boom !  He 
stuffs  his  fingers  into  his  ears.  He  sees  corpses,  and  cries  out 
in  fright.  Boom!  It  is  night,  and  they  are  shelling  the  city! 
Boom!  Boom! 

A  child  wakes  and  is  afraid,  and  weeps  in  the  darkness. 
What  has  made  the  bed  shake  ?  "  Mother,  where  are  you  .? 
I  am  awake."  "  Hush,  my  Darling,  I  am  here."  "  But, 
Mother,  something  so  queer  happened,  the  room  shook." 
Boom !   "  Oh !   What  is  it  ?  What  is  the  matter  ? "   Boom ! 

[90] 


AMY  LOWELL 

"  Where  is  Father  ?    I  am  so  afraid."    Boom !    The  child 
sobs  and  shrieks.  The  house  trembles  and  creaks.  Boom ! 

Retorts,  globes,  tubes,  and  phials  lie  shattered.  All  his 
trials  oozing  across  the  floor.  The  life  that  was  his  choos^ 
ing,  lonely,  urgent,  goaded  by  a  hope,  all  gone.  A  weary 
man  in  a  ruined  laboratory,  that  was  his  story.  Boom ! 
Gloom  and  ignorance,  and  the  jig  of  drunken  brutes.  Dis^ 
eases  like  snakes  crawling  over  the  earth,  leaving  trails  of 
slime.  Wails  from  people  burying  their  dead.  Through  the 
window  he  can  see  the  rocking  steeple.  A  ball  of  fire  falls 
on  the  lead  of  the  roof,  and  the  sky  tears  apart  on  a  spike  of 
flame.  Up  the  spire,  behind  the  lacings  of  stone,  zig^'zag^ 
ging  in  and  out  of  the  carved  tracings,  squirms  the  fire.  It 
spouts  like  yellow  wheat  fi-om  the  gargoyles,  coils  round  the 
head  of  Saint  John,  and  aureoles  him  in  light.  It  leaps  into 
the  night  and  hisses  against  the  rain.  The  Cathedral  is  a 
burning  stain  on  the  white,  wet  night. 

Boom  !  The  Cathedral  is  a  torch,  and  the  houses  next  to 
it  begin  to  scorch.  Boom !  The  bohemian  glass  on  the 
etagere  is  no  longer  there.  Boom !  A  stalk  of  flame  sways 
against  the  red  damask  curtains.  The  old  lady  cannot  walk. 
She  watches  the  creeping  stalk  and  counts.  Boom !  — 
Boom !  —  Boom ! 

[91  ] 


SOME  IMAGIST  POETS 

The  poet  rushes  into  the  street,  and  the  rain  wraps  him 
in  a  sheet  of  silver.  But  it  is  threaded  with  gold  and 
powdered  with  scarlet  beads.  The  city  burns.  Quivering, 
spearing,  thrusting,  lapping,  streaming,  run  the  flames. 
Over  roofs,  and  walls,  and  shops,  and  stalls.  Smearing  its 
gold  on  the  sky  the  fire  dances,  lances  itself  through  the 
doors,  and  lisps  and  chuckles  along  the  floors. 

The  child  wakes  again  and  screams  at  the  yellow  petalled 
flower  flickering  at  the  window.  The  little  red  lips  of  flame 
creep  along  the  ceiling  beams. 

The  old  man  sits  among  his  broken  experiments  and 
looks  at  the  burning  Cathedral.  Now  the  streets  are  swarm^ 
ing  with  people.  They  seek  shelter  and  crowd  into  the  eel/ 
lars.  They  shout  and  call,  and  over  all,  slowly  and  without 
force,  the  rain  drops  into  the  city.  Boom !  And  the  steeple 
crashes  down  among  the  people.  Boom !  Boom,  again ! 
The  water  rushes  along  the  gutters.  The  iire  roars  and 
mutters.   Boom! 


THE   END 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 

John  Gould  Fletcher 

Fire  and  Wine.   Grant  Richards,  Ltd.,  London,  191  3. 

FooPs  Gold.   Max  Goschen,  London,  191  3. 

The  Dominant  City.    Max  Goschen,  London,  191  3. 

The  Book  of  Nature.    Constable  &  Co. ,  London,  1 9 1  3 . 

Visions  of  the  Evening.   Erskine  McDonald,  London,   1913. 

Irradiations :  Sand  and  Spray.    Houghton  Mifflin  Company, 

Boston,  1 9 14. 

F.  S.  Flint 

The  Net  of  Stars.   Elkin  Mathews,  London.  1909. 

D.  H.  Lawrence 

Love  Poems  and  Others.   Duckworth  &  Co.,  London,  1 9 1  3. 
Prose:    The  White  Peacock.    William  Heinemann,  London,  191 1. 
The  Trespasser.   Duckworth  &  Co.,  London,  191  2. 
Sons  and  Lovers.    Duckworth  &  Co. ,  London,  1 9 1  3 . 
Drama  :  The  Widowing  of  Mrs.  Holroyd.    Mitchell  Kennerley, 

New  York,  1914. 

Amy  Lowell 

ji  Dome  of  Many- Coloured  Glass.    Houghton  Mifflin  Company,  Boston, 

1 9 1  2.     The  Macmillan  Company,  New  York,  1914. 

Sword  Blades  and  Poppy  Seed.   The  Macmillan  Company,  New  York  ; 

and  Macmillan  &  Co.,  London,  1914. 


CAMBRIDGE  .  MASSACHUSETTS 
U    .    S    .    A 


UC  SOUTHERN  v 

I  nil  l'lll|i||i| 


illlllllllllilillllll  llll    II    II    lilli    III,   I 

AA    000  630  798    7 


3  1210  00226  3679 


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